RUTTER, Ben and HERMESTON, Rodney (2019). The space between words: on the description of Parkinson’s Disease in Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections. Medical humanities. [Article]
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Hermeston Rutter The space between words.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.
Hermeston Rutter The space between words.pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
Disability or health-related literature has potential to shape public understanding of disability
and can also play an important role in medical curricula. However, there appears to be a gap
between a health humanities approach which may embrace fictional accounts and a cultural
disability studies approach which is deeply sceptical of fiction written by non-disabled
authors. This paper seeks to reconcile these perspectives and presents an analysis of the
language used by Jonathan Franzen in his description of Parkinson’s Disease in the novel The
Corrections. We use detailed linguistic analysis, specifically stylistics, to identify the
techniques Franzen adopts to represent aspects of impairment and disability. We describe
four specific linguistic devices used in the novel: reflector mode, iconicity, body part agency,
and fragmentation. We show how stylistics offers a unique analytical perspective for
understanding representations of disability and impairment. However, we emphasise the need
to promote critical and even resistant understandings of such representations and we discuss
the potential role of patient/service user input to assess fictional accounts.
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